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Player cannot use Melee attack cards against any character that has a greater Velocity than they do, and can only use Beam or Homing attack cards against characters with a greater Velocity than they do by discarding 1 copy of the desired attack card for every point of difference between the attacker and their target (example: Player A has 1 Velocity point and wants to attack Player B with 3 Velocity points, using attack card X. In order to do that, as an additional cost to play attack card X, Player A must discard 2 copies of attack card X from their hand).

The OP does not list the player's velocity. How do we know how many cards we would have to discard? Will it be updated later with velocities? Is everyone's default velocity 1?

Also, could you please put a clarifications section up at front of thread?

Wildcat - that name sounds like a potential decepticon

1) Everyone starts at 0 Velocity; it's listed beside your 'bot.

2) Yes, I'll work on that tonight.

The Ender on January 2011

Terrorism was a crucial factor. The exit poll asked, “Which one of these four issues is the most important facing the country?” Sixty-five percent of voters picked the economy or foreign policy, and these voters went for Clinton. Thirteen percent picked immigration, and those voters went for Trump. The backbreaker was the fourth issue, terrorism. Eighteen percent of voters picked that issue, and they broke for Trump, 57 percent to 39 percent. That gap, fatally, cost Clinton slightly more than 3 percentage points of the total electorate.

Also, switching to Ringo. Because Dunadan voted for himself...and the post made me laugh.

I'm skeptical about there being a village idiot. So, kellie's reasoning is...weird

My reasoning isn't weird . I switched from Dunadan to Ringo. Dunadan voted for himself, and I assumed he was gonna switch his vote toward the end of the night (Why wouldn't he? I guess he could be a village idiot...but that seems a little out of place in this game o.O )...so I wanted to vote for someone else who was getting a lot of votes.

Because me being day one'd is bad for me and for the village.

Kellie on January 2011

“If you tell the truth, you don't have to remember anything.” - Mark Twain

Terrorism was a crucial factor. The exit poll asked, “Which one of these four issues is the most important facing the country?” Sixty-five percent of voters picked the economy or foreign policy, and these voters went for Clinton. Thirteen percent picked immigration, and those voters went for Trump. The backbreaker was the fourth issue, terrorism. Eighteen percent of voters picked that issue, and they broke for Trump, 57 percent to 39 percent. That gap, fatally, cost Clinton slightly more than 3 percentage points of the total electorate.

Terrorism was a crucial factor. The exit poll asked, “Which one of these four issues is the most important facing the country?” Sixty-five percent of voters picked the economy or foreign policy, and these voters went for Clinton. Thirteen percent picked immigration, and those voters went for Trump. The backbreaker was the fourth issue, terrorism. Eighteen percent of voters picked that issue, and they broke for Trump, 57 percent to 39 percent. That gap, fatally, cost Clinton slightly more than 3 percentage points of the total electorate.

Terrorism was a crucial factor. The exit poll asked, “Which one of these four issues is the most important facing the country?” Sixty-five percent of voters picked the economy or foreign policy, and these voters went for Clinton. Thirteen percent picked immigration, and those voters went for Trump. The backbreaker was the fourth issue, terrorism. Eighteen percent of voters picked that issue, and they broke for Trump, 57 percent to 39 percent. That gap, fatally, cost Clinton slightly more than 3 percentage points of the total electorate.